William Felton "
Bill"
Russell (born February 12, 1934) is a retired
American professional
basketball player
who played
center for the
Boston Celtics of the
National Basketball
Association (NBA). A five-time winner of the
NBA Most Valuable Player
Award and a twelve-time
All-Star, Russell was the centerpiece of
the Celtics
dynasty that won eleven
NBA Championships during Russell's
thirteen-year career. Along with
Henri
Richard of the
National
Hockey League's
Montreal
Canadiens, Russell holds the record for the most championships
won by an athlete in a North American sports league.
Before his
professional career, Russell led the University of
San Francisco
to two consecutive NCAA
championships (1955, 1956). He also won a gold medal at
the
1956 Summer
Olympics as captain of the
U.S. national
basketball team.
Russell is widely considered one of the best
defensive players in NBA history. Listed as
between 6'9" (2.06 m) and 6'10" (2.08 m), Russell's
shot-blocking and
man-to-man defense were major reasons for
the Celtics' success. He also inspired his teammates to elevate
their own defensive play. Russell was equally notable for his
rebounding abilities. He led
the NBA in rebounds four times and tallied 21,620 total rebounds in
his career. He is one of just two NBA players (the other being
prominent rival
Wilt Chamberlain)
to have grabbed more than fifty rebounds in a game. Though never
the focal point of the Celtics'
offense, Russell also scored 14,522 career
points and provided effective passing.
Playing in the wake of pioneers like
Earl
Lloyd,
Chuck Cooper, and
Ray Felix, Russell was the first
African American player to achieve
superstar status in the NBA. He also served a three-season
(1966–69) stint as
player-coach for the
Celtics, becoming the first African American NBA coach. Frequent
battles with
racism left Russell with a
long-standing contempt of fans and journalists. When he retired,
Russell left Boston with a bitter attitude, although in recent
years his relationship with the city has improved.
Russell is
a member of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of
Fame
and the National Collegiate
Basketball Hall of Fame. He was selected into
NBA 25th Anniversary Team in 1971,
into
NBA 35th Anniversary
Team in 1980 and named as one of the
50 Greatest Players in NBA
History in 1996, one of only four players that selected into
all three teams. In 2007, he was enshrined in the
FIBA Hall of Fame. In 2009, the NBA
announced that the
NBA Finals MVP trophy
would be named the
Bill Russell
NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award in honor of
Russell.
Early years
Bill
Russell was born to Charles and Katie Russell in West
Monroe
, Louisiana
. West Monroe was strictly segregated, and
the Russells often struggled with racism. Once, Russell's father
was refused service at a gasoline station until the staff had taken
care of all the white customers. When his father attempted to leave
and find a different station, the attendant stuck a shotgun in his
face, threatening to kill him unless he stayed and waited his turn.
At another time, Russell's mother was walking outside in a fancy
dress when a policeman accosted her. He told her to go home and
remove the dress, which he described as "white woman’s clothing".
Because
large numbers of blacks were moving to Oakland
, California
during WWII to look for work there, Russell's
father moved the family out of Louisiana when Russell was eight
years old and settled them in Oakland. While there the
family fell into poverty, and Russell spent his childhood living in
a series of
project homes.
Charlie Russell is described as a "stern, hard man" who was
initially a janitor in a paper factory (a typical low paid,
intellectually unchallenging "Negro Job", as sports journalist John
Taylor commented), but later became a trucker when World War II
broke out. Being closer to his mother Katie than to his father,
Russell received a major emotional blow when she suddenly died when
he was 12. His father gave up his trucking job and became a steel
worker to be closer to his semi-orphaned children. Russell has
stated that his father became his childhood hero, later followed up
by Minneapolis Lakers superstar
George “Mr.
Basketball” Mikan, whom he met when he was in high
school.
In his early years, Russell struggled to develop his skills as a
basketball player. Although Russell was a good runner and jumper
and had extremely large hands, he simply did not understand the
game and was cut from the team in
junior high school.
As a sophomore at McClymonds High School
, Russell was almost cut again. However,
coach George Powles saw Russell's raw athletic potential and
encouraged him to work on his fundamentals. Russell, who was used
to racist abuse, was delighted by the warm words of his white
coach. He worked hard and used the benefits of a growth spurt to
become a decent basketballer, but it was not until his
junior and
senior years that he began to excel. Russell
soon became noted for his unusual style of defense. He later
recalled, "To play good defense... it was told back then that you
had to stay flatfooted at all times to react quickly. When I
started to jump to make defensive plays and to
block shots, I was initially corrected,
but I stuck with it, and it paid off."
One of
Russell's high school teammates was future Baseball
Hall-of-Famer
Frank
Robinson.
College career
Russell
was ignored by college scouts and did not receive a single letter
of interest until Hal DeJulio from the local University of
San Francisco
(USF) watched him in a high school game.
DeJulio was not impressed by Russell's meager scoring and
"atrocious fundamentals", but sensed that the young
center had an extraordinary instinct for
the game, especially in
clutch
situations. When DeJulio offered Russell a scholarship, the latter
eagerly accepted. Sports journalist John Taylor described it as a
watershed in Russell's life, because Russell realized that
basketball was his one chance to escape poverty and racism; as a
consequence, Russell swore to make the best of it.
At USF, Russell became the new starting center for coach
Phil Woolpert. Woolpert emphasized defense and
deliberate half-court play, concepts that favored defensive
standout Russell. Woolpert was unaffected by issues of skin color.
In 1954, he became the first coach of a major college basketball
squad to start three
African
American players: Russell,
K.C.
Jones and Hal Perry. In his USF years,
Russell used his relative lack of bulk to develop a unique style of
defense: instead of purely guarding the opposing center, he used
his quickness and speed to play help defense against opposing
forwards and aggressively
challenge their shots. Combining the stature and shot-blocking
skills of a center with the foot speed of a
guard, Russell became the centerpiece of
a USF team that soon became a force in college basketball.
After USF
kept Holy
Cross
star Tom Heinsohn
scoreless in an entire half, Sports Illustrated wrote, "If
[Russell] ever learns to hit the basket, they're going to have to
rewrite the rules."
However, the games were often difficult for the USF squad. Russell
and his African American teammates became targets of racist jeers,
both at USF and on the road.
In one notable incident, hotels in Oklahoma City
refused to admit Russell and his black teammates
while they were in town for the 1954 All-College Tournament.
In protest, the whole team decided to camp out in a closed
college dorm, which was later called an
important bonding experience for the group. Decades later, Russell
explained that his experiences hardened him against abuse of all
kinds. "I never permitted myself to be a victim," he said.
On the hardwood, his experiences were far more pleasant. Russell
led USF to
NCAA
championships in 1955 and 1956, including a string of 55
consecutive victories. He became known for his strong defense and
shot-blocking skills, once denying 13 shots in a game.
UCLA
coach John Wooden called
Russell "the greatest defensive man I've ever seen". During
his college career, Russell averaged 20.7
points per game and 20.3
rebounds per game. Besides basketball,
Russell represented USF in
track and field events. He
competed in the 440 yard (402 m) race, which he could
complete in 49.6 seconds. He also participated in the
high jump;
Track & Field News ranked
him as the seventh-best high jumper in the world in 1956. That
year, Russell won high jump titles at the Central California
AAU meet, the Pacific AAU
meet, and the West Coast Relays. One of his highest jumps occurred
at the West Coast Relays, where he achieved a mark of 6 feet
9¼ inches (2.06 m).
After his years at USF, the
Harlem
Globetrotters invited Russell to join their
exhibition basketball squad. Russell, who
was sensitive to any racial prejudice, was enraged by the fact that
owner
Abe Saperstein would only
discuss the matter with Woolpert. While Saperstein spoke to
Woolpert in a meeting, Globetrotters assistant coach Harry Hanna
tried to entertain Russell with jokes. The USF center was livid
after this snub and declined the offer: he reasoned that if
Saperstein was too smart to speak with him, then he was too smart
to play for Saperstein. Instead, Russell made himself eligible for
the
1956 NBA Draft.
1956 NBA Draft
In the 1956 NBA Draft,
Boston Celtics
coach
Red Auerbach had set his sights
on Russell, thinking his defensive toughness and
rebounding prowess were the missing
pieces the Celtics needed. In perspective, Auerbach’s thoughts were
unorthodox. In that period, centers and forwards were defined by
their offensive output, and their ability to play defense was
secondary. However, Boston's chances of getting Russell seemed
slim. Because the Celtics had finished second in the previous
season and the worst teams had the highest draft picks, the Celtics
had slipped too low in the draft order to pick Russell. In
addition, Auerbach had already used his territorial pick to acquire
talented forward
Tom Heinsohn. But
Auerbach knew that the
Rochester
Royals, who owned the first draft pick, already had a skilled
rebounder in
Maurice Stokes, were
looking for an outside shooting guard and were unwilling to pay
Russell the $25,000 signing bonus he requested.
The St. Louis Hawks, who owned the second pick,
originally drafted Russell, but were vying for Celtics center
Ed Macauley, a six-time All-Star who had roots in St.
Louis
. Auerbach agreed to trade Macauley, who had
previously asked to be traded to St. Louis in order to be with his
sick son, if the Hawks gave up Russell. However the owner of St
Louis called Auerbach later and demanded more in the trade. Not
only did he want Macauley, who was the Celtics premier player at
the time, he wanted
Cliff Hagan, who had
been serving in the military for three years and had not yet played
for the Celtics. After much debate, Auerbach agreed to give up
Hagan, and the Hawks made the trade. During that same draft, Boston
also claimed guard
K.C. Jones, Russell's former USF teammate.
Thus, in
one night, the Celtics managed to draft three future Hall of
Famers
: Russell, K.C. Jones and Heinsohn. The
Russell draft-day trade was later called one of the most important
trades in the history of North American sports.
1956 Olympics
Before his NBA rookie year, Russell was the captain of the
U.S. national
basketball team that competed at the
1956 Olympic
tournament.
Avery
Brundage, head of the International Olympic
Committee
, argued that Russell had already signed a
professional contract and thus was no longer an amateur, but
Russell prevailed. He had the option to skip the tournament
and play a full season for the Celtics, but he was determined to
play in the Olympics. He later commented that he would have
participated in the
high jump if he had
been snubbed by the basketball team.
Under coach Gerald
Tucker, Russell helped the national team win the gold medal in Melbourne
, defeating the Soviet Union
89–55 in the final game. The United States
dominated the tournament, winning by an average of 53.5 points per
game. Russell led the team in scoring, averaging 14.1 points per
game for the competition. His Celtics teammate K.C. Jones joined
him on the Olympic squad and contributed 10.9 points per
game.
Professional career
1956–59
Russell could not join the Celtics for the
1956–57 season until December, due to his
Olympic commitment. After rejoining the Celtics, Russell played 48
games, averaging 14.7 points per game and a league-high
19.6 rebounds per game. During this season, the Celtics
featured six future Hall-of-Famers: center Russell, forwards
Heinsohn and
Jim Loscutoff, guards
Bill Sharman and
Bob Cousy, and forward
Frank Ramsey, who came off the
bench. (K.C. Jones did not play for the Celtics until 1958 because
of military service.)
Russell's first Celtics game came on December 22, 1956 against the
St. Louis Hawks, led by star forward
Bob
Pettit, who held several all-time scoring records. Auerbach
assigned Russell to shut down St. Louis's main scorer, and the
rookie impressed the Boston crowd with his man-to-man defense and
shot-blocking. In previous years, the Celtics had been a
high-scoring team, but lacked the defensive presence needed to
close out tight games. However, with the added defensive presence
of Russell, the Celtics had laid the foundation for a dynasty. The
team utilized a strong defensive approach to the game, forcing
opposing teams to commit many
turnovers, which led to many easy
fast break points. Russell was an elite
help defender who allowed the Celtics to play the so-called "Hey,
Bill" defense: whenever a Celtic requested additional defensive
help, he would shout "Hey, Bill!" Russell was so quick that he
could run over for a quick
double team
and make it back in time if the opponents tried to find the open
man. He also became famous for his shot-blocking skills: pundits
called his blocks "Wilsonburgers", referring to the
Wilson NBA basketballs he "shoved back
into the faces of opposing shooters". This skill also allowed the
other Celtics to play their men aggressively: if they were beaten,
they knew that Russell was guarding the basket. This approach
allowed the Celtics to finish with a 44–28 regular season record,
the team's second-best record since beginning play in the
1946–47 season, and guaranteed a
post-season appearance.
However, Russell also received negative attention. Constantly
provoked by
New York Knicks center
Ray Felix during a game, he complained to
coach Auerbach. The latter told him to take matters into his own
hands, so after the next provocation, Russell punched Felix
unconscious, paid a 25-dollar fine and was no longer a target of
cheap fouls. With his teammates, Russell had a cordial
relationship, with the notable exception of fellow rookie and old
rival Heinsohn. Heinsohn felt that Russell resented him because the
former was named the 1957
NBA
Rookie of the Year: many people thought that Russell was more
important, but Russell also had only played half the season.
Russell also ignored Heinsohn's plea to give his cousin an
autograph, and openly said to Heinsohn that he deserved half of his
300-dollar Rookie of the Year check. The relationship between the
two rookies remained reserved. On the other hand, despite their
different ethnic backgrounds and lack of common off-court
interests, his relationship with Celtics point guard and fan
favorite Bob Cousy was amicable.
In
Game 1 of the Eastern Division
Finals, the Celtics met the
Syracuse Nationals, who were led by
Dolph Schayes. In Russell's first NBA
playoff game, he finished with 16
points and 31
rebounds, along with a reported 7
blocks. (At the time, blocks were not yet an officially registered
statistic.) After the Celtics' 108–89 victory, Schayes quipped,
“How much does that guy make a year? It would be to our advantage
if we paid him off for five years to get away from us in the rest
of this series.” The Celtics swept the Nationals in three games to
earn the franchise's first appearance in
the NBA Finals.
In the NBA Finals, the Celtics met the St. Louis Hawks, who were
again led by Bob Pettit, as well as former Celtic Ed Macauley. The
teams split the first six games, and the tension was so high that,
in Game 3, Celtics coach Auerbach punched his colleague Ben Kerner
and received a $300 fine. In the highly competitive Game 7, Russell
tried his best to slow down Pettit, but it was Heinsohn who scored
37 points and kept the Celtics alive. However, Russell contributed
by completing the famous “Coleman Play”. Here, Russell ran down
Hawks guard
Jack Coleman,
who had received an outlet pass at midcourt, and blocked his shot
despite the fact that Russell had been standing at his own baseline
when the ball was thrown to Coleman. The block preserved Boston's
slim 103–102 lead with 40-odd seconds left to play in regulation,
saving the game for the Celtics. In the second
overtime, both teams were in serious foul
trouble: Heinsohn had fouled out, and the Hawks were so depleted
that they had only 7 players left. With the Celtics leading 125–123
with one second left, the Hawks had the ball at their own baseline.
Reserve guard
Alex Hannum threw a long
alley oop pass to Pettit, and Pettit's
tip-in rolled indecisively on the rim for several seconds before
rolling out again. The Celtics won, earning their first NBA
Championship.
In the
1957–58 season, Russell
averaged 16.6 points per game and a league-record average of 22.7
rebounds per game. An interesting phenomenon began that year:
Russell was voted the
NBA Most
Valuable Player, but only named to the
All-NBA Second Team. This would occur repeatedly
throughout his career. The NBA reasoned that other centers were
better all-round players than Russell, but no player was more
valuable to his team. The Celtics won 49 games and easily made the
first berth in the
1958 NBA
Playoffs, and made the
1958 NBA
Finals against their familiar rivals, the St. Louis Hawks. The
teams split the first two games, but then Russell went down with a
foot injury in Game 3 and could no longer participate in the
playoffs. The Celtics surprisingly won Game 4, but the Hawks
prevailed in Games 5 and 6, with Pettit scoring 50 points in the
deciding Game 6.
In the following
1958–59 season,
Russell continued his strong play, averaging 16.7 points per game
and 23.0 rebounds per game in the regular season. The Celtics broke
a league record by winning 52 games, and Russell's strong
performance once again helped lead the Celtics through the
post-season, as they returned to the NBA Finals. In the
1959 NBA Finals, the Celtics recaptured the
NBA title, sweeping the
Minneapolis
Lakers 4–0. Lakers head coach
John
Kundla praised Russell, stating, “We don’t fear the Celtics
without Bill Russell. Take him out and we can beat them... He’s the
guy who whipped us psychologically.”
1959–66
In the
1959–60 season,
the NBA witnessed the debut of legendary 7 ft 1 in (2.16 m)
Philadelphia Warriors center
Wilt Chamberlain, who averaged an
unprecedented 37.6 points per game in his rookie year. On November
7, 1959, Russell's Celtics hosted Chamberlain's Warriors, and
pundits called the matchup between the best offensive and best
defensive center "The Big Collision" and "Battle of the Titans".
Both men awed onlookers with "nakedly awesome athleticism", and
while Chamberlain outscored Russell 30 to 22, the Celtics won
115–106, and the match was called a "new beginning of basketball".
The matchup between Russell and Chamberlain, the greatest defensive
and offensive centers in the NBA, respectively, became one of
basketball's greatest rivalries. In that season, Russell's Celtics
won a record 59 regular season games (including a then-record tying
17
game win streak) and met Chamberlain's Warriors
in the Eastern Division Finals.
Chamberlain outscored Russell by 81 points in the series, but the
Celtics walked off with a 4–2 series win. In the
1960 Finals, the Celtics outlasted the Hawks
4–3 and won their third championship in four years. Russell grabbed
an NBA Finals-record 40 rebounds in Game 2, and added 22 points and
35 rebounds in the deciding Game 7, a 122–103 victory for
Boston.
In the
1960–61 season, Russell
averaged 16.9 points and 23.9 rebounds per game, leading his team
to a regular season mark of 57–22. The Celtics earned another
post-season appearance, where they defeated the Syracuse Nationals
4–1
in the Eastern Division
Finals. The Celtics made good use of the fact that the
Los Angeles Lakers had exhausted St.
Louis in a long seven-game Western Conference Finals, and the
Celtics convincingly won in five games.
The
following season, Russell
scored a career-high 18.9 points per game, accompanied by 23.6
rebounds per game. While his rival Chamberlain had a
record-breaking season of 50.4 points per game and a
100-point game, the
Celtics became the first team to win 60 games in a season, and
Russell was voted as the NBA's Most Valuable Player. In the
post-season, the Celtics met the
Philadelphia Warriors of Chamberlain,
and Russell did his best to slow down the 50-points-per-game
scoring Warriors center. In Game 7, the game was tied with two
seconds left when
Sam Jones
sank a clutch shot that won the Celtics the series. In the
1962 NBA Finals, the Celtics met the Los
Angeles Lakers of star forward
Elgin
Baylor and star guard
Jerry West. The
teams split the first six games, and Game 7 was tied one second
before the end of regular time when Lakers guard
Rod Hundley faked a shot and instead passed out
to
Frank Selvy, who missed an open
eight-foot last-second shot that would have won L.A. the title.
Though the game was tied, Russell had the daunting task of
defending against Baylor with little frontline help, as the three
best Celtics forwards, Loscutoff, Heinsohn and
Tom Sanders, had fouled out. In overtime, Baylor
fouled out the fourth forward,
Frank Ramsey, so Russell was
completely robbed of his usual four-men wing rotation. But Russell
and little-used fifth forward
Gene
Guarilia successfully pressured Baylor into missed shots.
Russell finished with a
clutch
performance, scoring 30 points and tying his own NBA Finals
record with 40 rebounds in a 110–107 overtime win.
The Celtics lost playmaker Bob Cousy to retirement after the
1962–63 season, but they drafted
John Havlicek. Once again, the Celtics
were powered by Russell, who averaged 16.8 points and 23.6 rebounds
per game, won his fourth regular-season MVP title, and earned MVP
honors at the
1963 NBA All-Star
Game following his 19 point, 24 rebound performance for the
East. The Celtics reached the
1963 NBA
Finals, where they again defeated the Los Angeles Lakers, this
time in six games.
In the following
1963–64 season,
the Celtics posted a league-best 58–22 record in the regular
season. Russell scored 15.0 ppg and grabbed a career-high
24.7 rebounds per game, leading the NBA in rebounds for the
first time since Chamberlain entered the league. Boston defeated
the
Cincinnati Royals 4–1 to earn
another NBA Finals appearance, and then won against Chamberlain's
newly-relocated
San Francisco
Warriors 4–1. It was their sixth consecutive and seventh title
in Russell's eighth year, a streak unreached in any U.S.
professional sports league. Russell later called the Celtics'
defense the best of all time.
Russell again excelled during the
1964–65 season. The Celtics won a
league-record 62 games, and Russell averaged 14.1 points and 24.1
rebounds per game, winning his second consecutive rebounding title
and his fifth MVP award. In the
1965
NBA Playoffs, the Celtics played the Eastern Division Finals
against the
Philadelphia 76ers,
who had recently traded for Wilt Chamberlain. Russell held
Chamberlain to a pair of field goals in the first three quarters of
Game 3. In Game 5, Russell contributed 28 rebounds, 10 blocks,
seven
assists and six
steals. However, that playoff series
ended in a dramatic Game 7. Five seconds before the end, the Sixers
were trailing 110–109, but Russell turned over the ball. However,
when the Sixers’ Hall-of-Fame guard
Hal
Greer inbounded, John Havlicek stole the ball, causing Celtics
commentator
Johnny Most to scream:
“Havlicek stole the ball! It's all over! Johnny Havlicek stole the
ball!” After the Division Finals, the Celtics had an easier time in
the NBA Finals, winning 4–1 against the Los Angeles Lakers of Jerry
West and Elgin Baylor.
In the following
1965–66 season,
the Celtics won their
eighth consecutive
title. Russell’s team again beat Chamberlain’s Philadelphia
76ers 4 games to 1 in the Division Finals, proceeding to win the
NBA Finals in a tight seven-game showdown against the Los Angeles
Lakers. During the season, Russell contributed 12.9 points and 22.8
rebounds per game. This was the first time in seven years that he
failed to average at least 23 rebounds a game.
1966–69
Before the
1966–67 season,
Celtics coach Red Auerbach retired. Initially, he had wanted his
old player Frank Ramsey as coach, but Ramsey was too occupied
running his three lucrative nursing homes. His second choice Bob
Cousy declined, stating he did not want to coach his former
teammates, and the third choice Tom Heinsohn also said no, because
he did not think he could handle the often surly Russell. However,
Heinsohn proposed Russell himself as a player-coach, and when
Auerbach asked his center, he said yes. Russell thus became the
first African American head coach in NBA history, and commented to
journalists: "I wasn't offered the job because I am a Negro, I was
offered it because Red figured I could do it." The Celtics’
championship streak ended that season at eight, however, as Wilt
Chamberlain's Philadelphia 76ers won a record-breaking 68 regular
season games and overcame the Celtics 4–1 in the Eastern Finals.
The Sixers simply outpaced the Celtics, shredding the famous Boston
defense by scoring 140 points in the clinching Game 5 win. Russell
acknowledged his first real loss in his career (he had been injured
in 1958 when the Celtics lost the NBA Finals) by visiting
Chamberlain in the locker room, shaking his hand and saying,
"Great". However, the game still ended on a high note for Russell.
After the loss, he led his grandfather through the Celtics locker
rooms, and the two saw white Celtics player John Havlicek taking a
shower next to his black teammate
Sam Jones and discussing the game.
Suddenly, Russell Sr. broke down crying. Asked by his grandson what
was wrong, his grandfather replied how proud he was of him, being
coach of an organization in which blacks and whites coexisted in
harmony.
In Russell's penultimate season, the
1967–68 season, his numbers slowly
declined, but at age 34, he still tallied 12.5 points per game and
18.6 rebounds per game (the latter good for the third highest
average in the league).
In the Eastern
Division Finals, the 76ers had the better record than the
Celtics and were slightly favored. But then, national tragedy
struck as
Martin Luther King was
assassinated on April 4, 1968. With eight of the ten starting
players on Sixers and Celtics being African American, both teams
were in deep shock, and there were calls to cancel the
series.Cherry, 190–199. In a game called as "unreal" and "devoid of
emotion", the Sixers lost 127–118 on April 5. In Game 2,
Philadelphia evened the series with a 115–106 win, and in Games 3
and 4, the Sixers won, with Chamberlain suspiciously often defended
by Celtics backup center
Wayne Embry,
causing the press to speculate Russell was worn down. Prior to Game
5, the Celtics seemed dead: no NBA team had ever come back from a
3–1 deficit. However, the Celtics rallied back, winning Game 5
122–104 and Game 6 114–106, powered by a spirited Havlicek and
helped by a terrible Sixers shooting slump. In Game 7, 15,202
stunned Philadelphia fans witnessed a historic 100-96 defeat,
making it the first time in NBA history a team lost a series after
leading 3–1. Russell limited Chamberlain to only two shot attempts
in the second half. Despite this, the Celtics were leading only
97-95 with 34 seconds left when Russell closed out the game with
several consecutive clutch plays. He made a free throw, blocked a
shot by Sixers player
Chet Walker,
grabbed a rebound off a miss by Sixers player Hal Greer, and
finally passed the ball to teammate Sam Jones, who scored to clinch
the win. Boston then beat the Los Angeles Lakers
4–2 in the NBA Finals, giving Russell his
tenth title in 12 years. For his efforts Russell was named
Sports Illustrated's
Sportsman of the Year. After
losing for the fifth straight time against Russell and his Celtics,
Hall-of-Fame Lakers guard Jerry West stated, “If I had a choice of
any basketball player in the league, my No.1 choice has to be Bill
Russell. Bill Russell never ceases to amaze me.”
However, in the
1968–69 season,
Russell seemed to reach a breaking point.
Shocked by the
murder
of Robert
F. Kennedy,
disillusioned by the
Vietnam War, and
weary from his increasingly stale (and later divorced) marriage to
his wife Rose, he was convinced that the U.S. was a corrupt nation
and that he was wasting his time playing something as superficial
as basketball. He was 15 pounds overweight, skipped mandatory NBA
coach meetings and was generally lacking energy: after a
New York Knicks game, he complained of
intense pain and was diagnosed with acute
exhaustion. Russell pulled himself together and
put up 9.9 points and 19.3 rebounds per game, but the aging Celtics
stumbled through the regular season. Their 48–34 record was the
team's worst since
1955–56, and
they entered
the playoffs as only
the fourth-seeded team in the East. In the playoffs, however,
Russell and his Celtics achieved upsets over the Philadelphia 76ers
and New York Knicks to earn a meeting with the Los Angeles Lakers
in
the NBA Finals. L.A. now featured
new recruit Wilt Chamberlain next to perennial stars Baylor and
West, and were heavily favored. In the first two games, Russell
ordered not to double-team West, who used the freedom to score 53
and 41 points in the Game 1 and 2 Laker wins. Russell then ordered
to double-team West, and Boston won Game 3. In Game 4, the Celtics
were trailing by one point with seven seconds left and the Lakers
having the ball, but then Baylor stepped out of bounds, and in the
last play, Sam Jones used a triple screen by
Bailey Howell,
Larry Siegfried and Havlicek and hit a
buzzer beater which equalized the
series. The teams split the next two games, so it all came down to
Game 7 in L.A., where Lakers owner
Jack
Kent Cooke angered and motivated the Celtics by putting
"proceedings of Lakers victory ceremony" on the game leaflets.
Russell used a copy as extra motivation and told his team to play a
running game, because in that case, not the better, but the more
determined team was going to win.
The Celtics were ahead by nine points with five minutes remaining;
in addition, West was heavily limping after a Game 5 thigh injury
and Chamberlain had left the game with an injured leg. West then
hit one basket after the other and cut the lead to one, and
Chamberlain asked to return to the game. However, Lakers coach
Bill van Breda Kolff kept
Chamberlain on the bench until the end of the game, saying later
that he wanted to stay with the lineup responsible for the
comeback. The Celtics held on for a 108–106 victory, and Russell
claimed his eleventh championship in 13 years. At age 35, Russell
contributed 21 rebounds in his last NBA game. After the game,
Russell went over to the distraught West (who had scored 42 points
and was named the only
NBA Finals MVP
in history from the losing team), clasped his hand and tried to
soothe him. Days later, 30,000 enthusiastic Celtics fans cheered
their returning heroes, but Russell was not there: the man who said
he owed the public nothing ended his career and cut all ties to the
Celtics. It came as so surprising that even Red Auerbach was
blindsided, and as a consequence, he made the "mistake" of drafting
guard
Jo Jo White instead of a center.
Although White became a standout Celtics player, the Celtics lacked
an All-Star center, went just 34–48 in the next season and failed
to make the playoffs for the first time since 1950. In Boston, both
fans and journalists felt betrayed, because Russell left the
Celtics without a coach and a center and sold his retirement story
for $10,000 to
Sports Illustrated. Russell was accused of
selling out the future of the franchise for a month of his
salary.
Post-player career
Russell had his No.
6 jersey retired by the Celtics in 1972, and
was inducted into the Naismith
Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
in 1975. Russell, who had a difficult
relationship with the media, was not present at either event. After
retiring as a player, Russell had stints as head coach of the
Seattle SuperSonics (1973 to
1977) and
Sacramento Kings (1987 to
1988). His time as a coach was lackluster; although he led the
struggling SuperSonics into the playoffs for the first time in
franchise history, Russell’s defensive, team-oriented Celtics
mindset did not mesh well with the team, and he left in 1977 with a
162–166 record. Ironically, coach
Lenny
Wilkens later used a similar concept to help the SuperSonics
win the title in 1979. Russell’s
stint with the Kings was considerably worse, his last assignment
ending when the Kings went 17–41 to begin the
1987–88 season.
In addition, Russell ran into financial trouble.
He had invested
$250,000 into a rubber plantation in Liberia
, where he had wanted to spend his retirement, but
it went bankrupt. The same fate awaited his Boston
restaurant called "Slade's", after which he had to default on a
$90,000 government loan to purchase the outlet. The
IRS discovered that Russell owed $34,430 in tax money
and put a lien on his house. He became a
vegetarian, took up
golf and
worked as a
color commentator, but
he was uncomfortable as a broadcaster. He later said, "The most
successful television is done in eight-second thoughts, and the
things I know about basketball, motivation and people go deeper
than that." Russell also wrote books, usually written as a joint
project with a professional writer. These included 1979's
Second Wind and 2001's
Russell's Rules.
After
spending several years living as a recluse on Mercer Island
near Seattle
, Russell rose to prominence again in January 2006,
when he convinced Miami Heat superstar
center Shaquille O'Neal to bury the
hatchet with fellow NBA superstar and former Los Angeles Lakers
teammate Kobe Bryant, with whom O'Neal
had a bitter public
feud. Later that year, on November 17 2006, the two-time
NCAA winner Russell was recognized for his impact on college
basketball as a member of the founding class of the
National Collegiate
Basketball Hall of Fame. He was one of five, along with
John Wooden,
Oscar Robertson,
Dean
Smith and
Dr. James Naismith,
selected to represent the inaugural class.
On May 20 2007,
Russell was awarded an honorary
doctorate by Suffolk University
, where he served as its commencement speaker, and
Russell received an honorary degree from Harvard
University
on June 7 2007.Russell was also
honored during 2009 NBA All-Star
Weekend in Phoenix
. On February 14, 2009, during, NBA
Commissioner
David Stern announced that
the NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award award would be re-named
the "
Bill Russell
NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award" in honor of 11-time NBA
champion. The following day, during halftime of the actual All-Star
game, Celtics captains
Paul Pierce,
Kevin Garnett, and
Ray Allen presented Russell a surprise birthday
cake for his 75th birthday. Russell attended the final game of the
Finals that year to present his
newly christened namesake award to its winner,
Kobe Bryant.
Coaching record
|
| Boston |
| 1966–67 |
| 81 |
60 |
21 |
.671 |
2nd in Eastern |
9 |
4 |
5 |
| Lost in Division Finals |
|
| Boston |
| 1967–68 |
| 82 |
54 |
28 |
.659 |
2nd in Eastern |
19 |
12 |
7 |
| Won NBA
Championship |
|
| Boston |
| 1968–69 |
| 82 |
48 |
34 |
.585 |
4th in Eastern |
18 |
12 |
6 |
| Won NBA
Championship |
|
| Seattle |
| 1973–74 |
| 82 |
36 |
46 |
.439 |
3rd in Pacific |
— |
— |
— |
| Missed Playoffs |
|
| Seattle |
| 1974–75 |
| 82 |
43 |
39 |
.524 |
2nd in Pacific |
9 |
4 |
5 |
| Lost in Conf. Semifinals |
|
| Seattle |
| 1975–76 |
| 82 |
43 |
39 |
.524 |
2nd in Pacific |
6 |
2 |
4 |
| Lost in First Round |
|
| Seattle |
| 1976–77 |
| 82 |
40 |
42 |
.488 |
4th in Pacific |
— |
— |
— |
| Missed Playoffs |
|
| Sacramento |
| 1987–88 |
| 58 |
17 |
41 |
.293 |
(fired) |
— |
— |
— |
| — |
|
| Career |
|
631 |
341 |
290 |
.540 |
|
61 |
34 |
27
Accomplishments and legacy
- Bill Russell was the cornerstone of the Boston Celtics'
dynasty.
- :— introductory line of Russell's nba.com/history summary.
Russell is one of the most successful and decorated athletes in
North American sports history. His awards and achievements include
eleven NBA championships as a player with the Boston Celtics in
13 seasons (including two NBA championships as player/head coach), and he is credited with
having raised defensive play in the NBA to a new level. By winning
the 1956 NCAA Championship with USF and the 1957 NBA title with the
Celtics, Russell became the first of only four players in
basketball history to win an NCAA championship and an NBA
Championship back-to-back (the others being Henry Bibby, Magic
Johnson, and Billy
Thompson). In the interim, Russell collected an Olympic gold
medal in 1956. His stint as coach of the Celtics was also of
historical significance, as he became the first black head coach in
major U.S. professional sports when he succeeded Red
Auerbach.
In his first NBA full season (1957–58), Russell became the first
player in NBA history to average more than 20 rebounds per game for
an entire season, a feat he accomplished 10 times in his 13
seasons. Russell's
51 rebounds in a single game is the second highest performance
ever, only trailing Chamberlain's all-time record of 55. He still
holds the NBA record for rebounds in one half with 32 (vs.
Philadelphia, on November 16 1957). Career-wise, Russell ranks
second only to Wilt Chamberlain in regular season total (21,620)
and average (22.5) rebounds per game, and led the NBA in average
rebounds per game four times.. Russell is the all-time playoff
leader in total (4,104) and average (24.9) rebounds per game, he
grabbed 40 rebounds in three separate playoff games (twice in the
NBA Finals), and he never failed to average at least 20 rebounds
per game in any of his 13 post-season campaigns. Russell also had
seven regular season games with 40 or more rebounds, the NBA Finals
record for highest rebound per game average (29.5 rpg, 1959) and by
a rookie (22.9 rpg, 1957). In addition, Russell holds the NBA Finals single-game record for most rebounds
(40, March 29 1960 vs. St. Louis and April 18 1962 vs. Los
Angeles), most rebounds in a quarter (19, April 18 1962 vs. Los
Angeles), and most consecutive games with 20 or more rebounds (15
from April 9 1960–April 16 1963). He also had 51 in one game, 49 in
two others, and twelve straight seasons of 1,000 or more rebounds.
Russell was known as one of the most clutch players in the NBA. He played in 11
deciding games (10 times in Game 7s, once in a Game 5), and ended
with a flawless 11–0 record. In these eleven games, Russell
averaged 18 points and 29.45 rebounds.
On the hardwood, he was considered the consummate defensive center,
noted for his unmatched defensive intensity, his stellar basketball
IQ and his sheer will to win.
Russell excelled at playing man-to-man defense, blocking shots, and
grabbing defensive and offensive rebounds. He also could score with
putbacks and made mid-air outlet passes to point guard Bob Cousy
for easy fast break points. He also was known as a fine passer and
pick-setter, featured a decent
left-handed hook shot and finished strong
on alley oops. However, on offense, Russell's output was limited.
His NBA career personal averages show him to be an average scorer
(15.1 points career average), a poor free
throw shooter (56.1%), and average overall shooter from the
field (44%, not exceptional for a center). In his 13 years, he
averaged a relatively low 13.4 field goals attempted (normally, top
scorers average 20 and more), illustrating that he was never the
focal point of the Celtics offense, instead focusing on his
tremendous defense.
In his career, Russell won five regular season MVP awards (1959,
1961–63, 1965)—tied with Michael
Jordan for second all-time behind Kareem Abdul Jabbar's six awards. He was
selected three times to the All-NBA
First Teams (1959, 1963, 1965) and eight Second Teams (1958,
1960–62, 1964, 1966–68), and was a twelve-time NBA All-Star
(1958–1969). Russell was elected to one NBA All-Defensive First Team. This
took place during his last season (1969), and was the first season
the NBA All-Defensive Teams were selected. In 1970, The Sporting News named Russell the
"Athlete of the Decade". Russell is universally seen as one of the
best NBA players ever, and was declared "Greatest Player in the
History of the NBA" by the Professional Basketball Writers
Association of America in 1980. For his achievements, Russell was
named "Sportsman of the Year" by Sports Illustrated in 1968. He also
made all three NBA Anniversary Teams: the NBA 25th Anniversary
All-Time Team (1970), the NBA 35th Anniversary All-Time Team (1980)
and the NBA 50th Anniversary All-Time Team (1996). Russell ranked
#18 on ESPN's 50 Greatest Athletes of the
20th Century in 1999. In 2003, SLAM Magazine named Russell the #4 player
of all time behind Michael Jordan, Wilt Chamberlain and Oscar
Robertson.On Saturday February 14, 2009, during the 2009 NBA All-Star Weekend in Phoenix, NBA
Commissioner David Stern announced that
the NBA Finals MVP Award
would be named after Bill Russell.
Personal life
Russell was married to his college sweetheart Rose Swisher from
1956 to 1973. They had three children, namely daughter Karen Russell, the television pundit and
lawyer, and sons William Jr. and Jacob. However, the couple grew
emotionally distant and divorced. In 1977, he married Dorothy Anstett, Miss
USA of 1968, but they divorced in 1980. In 1996, Russell
married his third wife Marilyn Nault, and their marriage lasted
until her death in January 2009. His older brother is the noted
playwright Charlie L. Russell. Michael Menna, Bill's best
friend, helped him get through the 'shaky' times.
During his career, Russell was one of the first big earners in NBA
basketball. His rookie contract was worth $24,000, only
fractionally smaller than the $25,000 of top earner Bob Cousy. In
contrast to other Celtics, who had to work in the offseason to
maintain their standard of living (Heinsohn sold insurance, Gene
Guarilia was a professional guitar player, Cousy ran a basketball
camp, and Auerbach invested in plastics and a Chinese restaurant),
Russell never had to work part-time. When Wilt Chamberlain became the first NBA
player to earn $100,000 in salary in 1965, Russell went to Auerbach
and demanded a $100,001 salary, which he promptly received.
Personality
Russell was driven by "a neurotic need to win", as his teammate
Heinsohn observed. He was so tense before every game that he
regularly threw up in the locker rooms; it happened so frequently
that his fellow Celtics were more worried when it did not
happen. He was also known for his natural authority. When he became
player-coach in 1967, Russell bluntly said to his team mates that
"he intended to cut all personal ties to other players", and
seamlessly made the transition from their peer to their
superior.
To teammates and friends, Russell was open and amicable, but was
extremely distrusting and cold towards anyone else. Journalists
were often treated to the "Russell Glower", described as an "icily
contemptuous stare accompanied by a long silence". Russell was also
notorious for his refusal to give autographs or even acknowledge
the Celtics fans, so far that he was called "the most selfish,
surly and uncooperative athlete" by one pundit.
Russell-Chamberlain rivalry
For most of his career, Russell was close friends with his
perennial opponent Wilt
Chamberlain. Chamberlain often invited Russell over for
Thanksgiving, and at Russell's place,
conversation mostly concerned Russell's electric trains. However,
the relationship deteriorated into intense loathing after Game 7 of
the 1969 NBA Finals, where
Chamberlain took himself out of a close game with six minutes left
and never returned. Russell accused Chamberlain of being a malingerer and of "copping out" of the game when
it seemed that the Lakers would lose; in retaliation, Chamberlain
(whose knee was so bad that he could not play the entire offseason
and ruptured it in the next season) was livid at Russell and saw
him as a backstabber. The two men did not talk to each other for
over 20 years until Russell attempted to patch things up, although
he never uttered a genuine apology. At the eulogy, Russell stated
that he never considered Chamberlain his rival and disliked the
term, instead pointing out that they rarely talked about
basketball. When Chamberlain died in 1999, Chamberlain's nephew
stated that Russell was the second person he was ordered to break
the news to.
Racist abuse, controversy and reconciliation
Russell's life was marked with an uphill battle against racism and questionable actions in the wake of this
hardship. As a child, the young Russell witnessed how his parents
were victims of racial abuse, and eventually moved into housing
projects to escape the daily torrent of bigotry. When he later
became a standout amateur basketball player at USF, Russell
recalled how he and his few fellow African American colleagues were
jeered by white students. Even after he became a star on the Boston
Celtics, Russell was the victim of racial abuse. When the NBA
All-Stars toured the U.S. in the 1958 offseason, white hotel owners
in segregated North
Carolina denied rooms
to Russell and his black teammates, causing him later to bitterly
write in his memoir Go Up for Glory, "It stood out, a wall
which understanding cannot penetrate. You are a Negro. You
are less. It covered every area. A living, smarting, hurting,
smelling, greasy substance which covered you. A morass to fight
from." Before the 1961–62 season, Russell refused
to play in an exhibition game in Lexington , Kentucky when he and his black teammates were refused
service at a local restaurant.
As a consequence, Russell was extremely sensitive to all racial
prejudice: according to Taylor, he often imagined insults even if
none existed. He was active in the Black
Power movement and supported Muhammad
Ali's decision to refuse to be drafted. He was often called
"Felton X" and even purchased land in Liberia. Russell's thinking
became increasingly militant, so far that he was quoted in a 1963
Sports Illustrated interview with the words: "I dislike
most white people because they are people... I like most blacks
because I am black", expressing that "human" was a negative trait
and "black" was a positive trait which were mutually exclusive.
However, when his white Celtics teammate Frank Ramsey asked whether
he hated him, Russell claimed to be misquoted, but few believed it.
Also, Taylor remarks that Russell overlooked that his career was
only made possible by the white people who were proven
anti-racists, namely his white high school coach George Powles (the
person who encouraged him to play basketball), his white college
coach Phil Woolpert (who integrated USF basketball), white Celtics
coach Red Auerbach (who is universally regarded as an anti-racist
pioneer and made him the first black NBA coach), and white
Celtics owner Walter A. Brown, who gave him a high $24,000 rookie
contract, just $1,000 shy of the top earning veteran Bob
Cousy.
Nevertheless, as a result of repeated racial bigotry, Russell
refused to respond to fan acclaim or friendship from his neighbors,
thinking it was insincere and hypocritical. He decided that the
world had given him nothing, so in return, he could give the world
nothing. This attitude contributed to his legendary bad rapport
with fans and journalists. He alienated the Boston Celtics fans by
saying, "You owe the public the same it owes you, nothing! I refuse
to smile and be nice to the kiddies." This cemented the
general opinion that Russell (who was the highest paid Celtic) was
egotistical, paranoid and hypocritical, and even the FBI described
Russell in his file as "an arrogant Negro who won't sign autographs
for white children". The already hostile atmosphere between
Russell and Boston hit its nadir when vandals broke into his house,
covered the walls with racist graffiti, damaged his trophies and
defecated into the beds. In response, Russell described Boston as a "flea
market of racism". After his
retirement, he viciously described the Boston press as corrupt,
anti-black and racist, so far that Boston sports journalist Larry
Claflin commented that Russell himself was the real racist.
However, his oft-proclaimed disdain for fans or the establishment
did not stop him from accepting a $250,000 contract to sign 5,000
pieces of memorabilia.
Russell, who invariably saw himself
as a victim of the media, was present neither when his Number 6
jersey was retired in 1972, nor when he was inducted into the Hall
of Fame in 1975, shunning the limelight both times. Despite the
bitterness that Russell felt toward Boston, in recent years he has
visited the city on a regular basis, something he never did in the
years immediately after his retirement. Russell still has sore
feelings towards the city, but there has been something of a
reconciliation in recent years. When Russell originally retired, he demanded
that his jersey be retired in an empty Boston Garden . In 1995, the Celtics left Boston Garden and
entered the FleetCenter , now the TD Garden, and as the main festive act,
the Boston organization wanted to re-retire Russell's jersey in
front of a sellout audience. Perennially wary of the
"racist" city of Boston, Russell decided to make amends and gave
his approval. On May 6, 1999 the Celtics re-retired Russell's
jersey in a ceremony attended by Russell's on-court rival
Chamberlain, along with Celtics legend Larry
Bird and Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. The crowd gave
Russell a prolonged standing ovation, which brought tears to his
eyes. Russell was visibly shaken at this outpour of adoration. He
thanked Chamberlain for taking him to the limit and "making [him] a
better player" and the crowd for "allowing [him] to be a part of
their lives."
On December 2, 2008, Boston Mayor Thomas Menino and The Mayor's
Office of New Bostonians awarded Russell the 2008 We Are Boston
Leadership Awards. Russell, who according to the mayor flew a
"red-eye flight" to be there, attended the annual event with his
daughter. He was visibly grateful and shared anecdotes of racial
bigotry when he first came to Boston as a player and bought a home
in Reading, Massachusetts. Russell congratulated the mayor on
wanting to be a "mayor for all of Boston" and commented that it was
a city that truly changed.
Books
Further reading
- Kornheiser, Tony (1999). "Bill Russell: Nothing but a Man". In
ESPN SportsCentury. Michael MacCambridge, Editor. New
York: Hyperion-ESPN Books. pp. 178–89.
References
External links
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